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Kate Fleming
Kate Fleming
from Wikipedia

Kathryn Ann Fleming (October 6, 1965 – December 14, 2006)[1] was an American actress, artist, singer, and audiobook narrator and producer. She was the owner and executive producer at Cedar House Audio, an audio production company specializing in spoken word, that is located in Seattle, Washington, United States.

Key Information

Biography

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Fleming was born in Arlington, Virginia in 1965. She grew up in the Washington, D.C. area and graduated from the College of William and Mary in 1987 (Bachelor of Arts, Religion). Fleming studied at the Actors Theatre of Louisville, Kentucky, and was an alumna of the 1987/1988 Apprentice Company.[2]

After a stint as a professional actor, she branched into audiobooks in the mid-1990s. Fleming recorded well over 200 titles, many under the stage name Anna Fields.[3]

In 2004, Fleming won the Audie Award for Unabridged Fiction for her performance of Ruth Ozeki's All Over Creation. In a July 1, 2005 interview with the William & Mary Alumni Association, Fleming noted several of her favorite narration projects: Bel Canto by Ann Patchett, The Falls by Joyce Carol Oates, Baker Towers by Jennifer Haigh, and "any title" by Louise Erdrich.[4] In addition to her work on audiobooks, she also narrated the Military Channel's six-episode series Navy Seals, which chronicled the six-month basic training process for US Navy Seals in 2001. Another military-themed narration was for the Discovery Channel documentary Secrets of the Stealth: Nighthawk, on the F-117 Nighthawk, the US Air Force's first stealth plane, and its crucial role in winning the first Gulf War.

Fleming was killed when she was trapped inside the flooded basement of her Madison Valley studio during the Hanukkah Eve wind storm of 2006. She is survived by her wife and partner of nine years, Charlene Strong.[5][6][7][8][9][10] At the hospital, Strong was denied access to see Fleming until permission was granted by an out-of-state relative. The experience led Strong to advocate for legislation that was eventually passed as Washington's Domestic Partnership Law.[11][12]

After Fleming's death, the City of Seattle commissioned a report to determine the cause of flash flooding in Fleming's neighborhood.[13] As of 2013, the house where Fleming died had been replaced by a garden, and the city has completed a stormwater project in the neighborhood. The project features a reservoir capable of holding excess storm runoff when the rest of the system is over capacity. A memorial at the site is inscribed with words that Fleming would say before going on stage as an actress: "Be a light. Be a flame. Be a beacon."[14][15][16]

Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Role Notes
1993 Hard Candy Teacher Film short
2001 Navy SEALs: BUDS Class 234 Narrator Educational
2006 In the Shadow of the Himalayas: How People Live in Nepal Narrator Educational Short

Video games

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Year Title Role
1999 Freddi Fish 4: The Case of the Hogfish Rustlers of Briny Gulch Calico Catfish, Fluke
Mario Golf Azalea
2000 Mario Tennis Princess Daisy

References

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from Grokipedia
Katherine Elizabeth Fleming is an American historian and academic administrator who has served as president and chief executive officer of the J. Paul Getty Trust, the world's wealthiest art institution with an endowment exceeding $7 billion, since August 2022. Specializing in modern Greek history, Mediterranean studies, and the cultural politics of nationalism, she previously held positions as provost of New York University Abu Dhabi, president of New York University in Florence, and the Alexander S. Onassis Professor of Hellenic Culture and Civilization at New York University. Fleming's scholarship emphasizes empirical analysis of historical migrations, identity formation, and interethnic relations, as evidenced in works such as Greece: A Jewish History and The Muslim Bonaparte, which draw on archival evidence to challenge prevailing narratives in academia often influenced by ideological frameworks. Under her leadership at the Getty, she has prioritized strategic conservation efforts, global research initiatives, and public access to collections amid challenges like wildfire threats to cultural heritage sites.

Early life

Upbringing and education

Kate Fleming was born Kathryn Ann Fleming on October 6, 1965, in Arlington, . She spent her early years in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, including time growing up in . Fleming pursued studies in religion and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree from the in 1987. This academic background aligned with her initial interests in performance and narrative arts, though specific details of her pre-college remain undocumented in available records.

Career

Film and live-action roles

Fleming's live-action screen roles were limited, reflecting an early career emphasis on stage acting before transitioning to voice-over and narration work. Her sole credited film appearance was as a teacher in the 1993 short film Hard Candy, a 10-minute drama directed by Michael McFadden exploring a child's escapist fantasy amid hardship. Prior to this, after training at the Louisville School of Acting, she performed professionally in Washington, D.C., theaters during the early 1990s, though specific production credits from this regional stage work remain undocumented in major databases. No television series or feature-length live-action roles are recorded for her.

Video game voice work

Fleming provided voice acting for various family-oriented video games in the late 1990s and early 2000s, including roles in children's adventure titles and Nintendo's Mario sports series. Her work often featured in educational or casual gaming releases from developers like Humongous Entertainment and Nintendo. In Mario Tennis (2000, Nintendo 64), she voiced Princess Daisy and the customizable player character Kate. In the preceding title Mario Golf (1999, Nintendo 64), Fleming supplied voices for supporting characters, including Azalea. Fleming also contributed to Humongous Entertainment's underwater adventure Freddi Fish 4: The Case of the Hogfish Rustlers of Briny Gulch (1999, Windows), voicing Cousin Calico Catfish and Fluke. Additional credits include supplementary voice work in Pajama Sam 3: You Are What You Eat From Your Head To Your Feet (2000, Windows), Hoyle Casino (2001, Windows), and earlier projects such as Iz and Auggie Escape From Dimension Q (1996, Windows) and Rage of Mages (1998, Windows).
YearTitleRole
1996Iz and Auggie Escape From Dimension QExtras
1998Rage of MagesVoice talents
1999Freddi Fish 4: The Case of the Hogfish Rustlers of Briny GulchCousin Calico Catfish, Fluke; additional voices
1999Mario GolfAzalea; voices
2000Mario TennisPrincess Daisy, Kate
2000Pajama Sam 3: You Are What You Eat From Your Head To Your FeetAdditional voices
2001Hoyle CasinoVoices

Audiobook narration and production

Kate Fleming narrated over 250 audiobooks, frequently using the pseudonym , a name derived from her great-grandmother. Her recordings encompassed a wide range of genres, including literary fiction by authors such as , , and , earning acclaim for her expressive and ability to convey character nuances. In 2004, she received the Audie Award for her narration of The Dive from Clausen's Pier by Ann Packer, recognizing excellence in audiobook performance. Fleming founded and owned Cedar House Audio Productions in Seattle, Washington, serving as and specializing in spoken-word audio content. The company focused on high-quality audiobook production, where she directed, produced, and technically oversaw recordings, leveraging her background in and audio engineering. Trained at the Actors Theatre of Louisville, Fleming transitioned from stage aspirations to audiobook work, emphasizing the artistry of reading aloud in her productions. Her studio operations included voicing select projects beyond narration, contributing to the company's reputation for professional spoken audio.

Personal life

Relationships and residence

Fleming was married to Charlene Strong, with whom she shared a home and professional collaboration through their audio , Cedar House Audio Productions. The couple wed in 1998 in the backyard of Fleming's parents' home in , after having been partners for several years. No children are recorded from the marriage. Fleming resided in Seattle, Washington, specifically in the Madison Valley neighborhood, where she maintained a home studio for her narration and production work. She was the youngest of eight siblings, including six sisters and one brother, born into a large family in .

Death and legacy

Circumstances of death

Kate Fleming died on December 14, 2006, at the age of 41, from drowning during a in her home. The incident occurred amid the Hanukkah Eve wind storm, a severe weather event that brought heavy rainfall and high winds to the , causing widespread flooding in low-lying areas. Fleming was in the basement recording studio of her Madison Valley residence when rainwater rapidly accumulated, forming a torrent that overwhelmed the space. As the storm intensified that evening, Fleming rushed downstairs to protect her audio equipment and ongoing recordings for her , which she owned and operated from the home studio. A sudden surge of water—described by witnesses as a 4-foot wall rushing down the adjacent Dewey Place East—poured into the basement, trapping her inside. Neighbors, alerted by the flooding, attempted a by breaking through a window and pulling her from the water, but she could not be revived despite emergency efforts and was pronounced dead at . The flood's severity stemmed from a confluence of factors, including the storm's extreme —over 2 inches in a short period—and the of the Madison Valley, where runoff from surrounding hills funneled into streets and homes without adequate drainage. No evidence of foul play or was reported; the was ruled accidental by authorities. In response, the area later implemented stormwater improvements, including a retention pond dedicated in Fleming's memory in 2013 to mitigate future risks.

Awards, recognition, and influence

Fleming won the Audie Award for Unabridged Fiction in 2004 for her narration of Ruth Ozeki's All Over Creation, recognizing her portrayal of diverse characters in a story about and family dynamics. She also received more than a dozen Earphones Awards from AudioFile magazine, which honor exceptional audiobook performances based on criteria including vocal characterization and pacing. Her narration work earned widespread acclaim in the industry, where she completed over 200 titles, often under the pseudonym Anna Fields, and was sought after by authors who specified her for adaptations of their novels due to her ability to embody multiple voices and accents convincingly. Obituaries in major outlets described her as a pioneering figure whose recordings preserved literary works in audio form, with noting her as one of the country's most talented narrators. Fleming's influence extended to shaping standards in audiobook production through her studio work at Cedar House Audio, where she emphasized high-fidelity recording techniques, and her performances influenced subsequent narrators in handling complex ensemble casts. Following her death, her partner Charlene Strong's advocacy, prompted by exclusion from hospital decisions and death certificate processes due to the lack of formal marriage recognition, contributed to Washington state's 2007 legislation allowing domestic partners to be listed on death certificates, signed into law by Governor . In 2013, dedicated a stormwater detention pond with an integrated to her memory, symbolizing community efforts to mitigate flash flooding risks.

References

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